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Would be nice to cook my own meals every now and then.. Any suggestions for "easy" camino cooking?
Evan, wow that's great. I forget where you stopped your Levante but I remember it was quite a serendipitous start with you having a work trip and then someone who wanted to walk with you or something like that. I look forward to hearing all about it - will you be posting here and/or on your blog? Buen camino LaurieThanks for the tip Laurie,
I will be continuing my Camino Levante from where I left off starting next week. I will look out for gazpacho in a box. Sounds wonderful. With all that walking any nourishment that is not dry and more liquid sounds really appealing.
Cheers.
Caneadea,Thank you all for sharing ... I am excited to learn all I can ... I can't stop reading n researching ...
Is there camping sites along the trails? N whats the best way of paying for groceries ect? Via bank card, credit card, cash, ect...
Thanks,
Buen Camino,
Caneadea
Caneadea,
Welcome to the Forum!
Cash is the common method of payment along the camino. However most pilgrims use a credit or debit card to obtain their cash. Read more about such cards here in this recent link.
Enjoy your research and Buen camino!
MM
van, wow that's great. I forget where you stopped your Levante but I remember it was quite a serendipitous start with you having a work trip and then someone who wanted to walk with you or something like that. I look forward to hearing all about it - will you be posting here and/or on your blog? Buen camino Laurie
So are you saying you will have company? So happy to hear that -- I have no doubt that my enthusiasm for the Levante was colored in no small part by the fact that I met two French companions on day 3 or 4 and we walked into Santiago together. Over the next five or six weeks, we met maybe two or three others. And I was walking in HIGH season! Remind me where you are starting. (and sorry to hijack the thread). Buen camino, LaurieHi Laurie,
I will be posting it via my blog, coming back alive after a year. It was a 2 days reunion with global colleagues from my first job and 12 days of Camino Levante before that. I was lucky to have someone I met on my Camino via de la plata in 2008 also walking with me (another reunion). I wanted to walk the Tunnel Route, he wanted the Levante instead. I am easy either way. He's from UK, semi-retired and spends a few months a year in his second home in Andalucia so it's easy to plan for the return to finish the route.
Would be nice to cook my own meals every now and then.. Any suggestions for "easy" camino cooking?
I got to walk for a while in a group that included a 20-something chef from a Michelin-starred restaurant in London, and later in the same year an Aussie chef. Highly recommended! (Wonder what it would have been like to have had both of them in the kitchen at the same time but that never happened, perhaps fortunately.)...or a chef-in-disguise walking as a pilgrim
This is a lovely story, Alex. And what you say, "Do not judge by the surface" is so true. I well remember, and regret, the morning my companion and I walked into Grañón, looking for desayuno. There was not a sign of life anywhere, when all of a sudden a dreadlocked individual, wearing what appeared to be pajama pants, emerged from an albergue and crossed the street. Although he gave us a wonderfully warm smile, we were skeptical of his appearance and continued on. It was only on our way out of the town, still not having had any breakfast, that we learned from a young German pilgrim of the warm hospitality, and good breakfast, he had received at that albergue that very morning. It was our great loss.I frequently cook my own meals in well-equipped albergues (most of them are). Easy & cheap cooking, like a dried bag of veg.soup, adding( a can of tuna in olive oil + a can of spicy mussels), or chopped choriso, with bread and wine as side orders. 4-6 Euros for a complete dinner for 2 persons.
One afternoon, I was alone in the kitchen, except from a BIG Spanish skinhead with lots of tattoos everywhere, just feeding on some dried bread. I couldn't possibly eat up all my soup & bread/wine, so I invited him to share with me the soup and bread/wine for free, which he very happily accepted.
The next day, as I was heading towards Bar Elvis, I heard a shout "Alex! Come in here!" from a cafe I was passing. Yep, the skinhead, with 7 other skinhead Spaniards, all eager to buy me a big cold beer, which made it a perfect pit stop for a beer lover. I couldn't possibly have met better goodguys. Should also say: They were all +30 years younger than this old man.
Lessons learned:
1. Do not judge by the surface
2. Give, and you will receive. Often more than what you give- In my case, both an ice cold beer and unexpected friendship from many nice people, despite their frightening looks...
Great lessons, and great Spanish people.
We cooked as much as possible... Tended to be cheaper and healthier! We did egg scrambles with tons of veggies and ham, a large salad with grilled chicken, veggies and beans! We made chicken Alfredo and stir fry!! It was some of my favorite moments cooking together and sitting down for family meals!!Would be nice to cook my own meals every now and then.. Any suggestions for "easy" camino cooking?